Vic Lee is a London-based graphic designer-turned-artist-turned-illustrator, muralist, storyteller, typographer, book publisher and 'wizard of ink’.

His work can be seen on walls across the UK, and thanks to the success of his recent Corona Diary project, now on coffee tables across the world.

He draws in black and white, simplifying the noise we all experience, and injecting his own sense of humour and personality into each piece.

In February 2020 Vic started documenting the Coronavirus outbreak by drawing his experiences – as a way to deal with his own feelings about the situation. Somewhere along the line this turned into The Corona Diary project which has become the must-have book of the period.

Vic started posting videos about the project on social media, which helped him reach more and more people until he finally pressed stop and self-published the book, signing, packaging and posting each one.

He’s recently donated £5000 of his own money to the charity FareShare UK as a way of saying thank you to all his readers.

This interview is split into 2 parts.

In Part 1 you'll discover:

How 3D art influences his illustration workVic's typography & fonts influenceWhy Vic doesn’t follow the '3 font rule'The tools he usesHow his illustrated diaries are a way to record his own travelsHow a book he read predicted the Covid pandemicWhy he recorded a YouTube video to encourage children to draw their own diariesHow a difficult childhood influenced his passion for drawingWhy illustration was his internal therapyHow life after the Covid lockdown will effect the way we go forwardWhy the lockdown was Vic’s ’sabbatical from life'The one thing he’s learnt during lockdownWhy he decided to stop drawing and hit publish